2009 A-League Grand Final

The 2009 A-League Grand Final took place at Telstra Dome in Melbourne, Australia on 28 February 2009.

2009 A-League Grand Final
Event2008–09 A-League
Date28 February 2009
VenueTelstra Dome, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Man of the MatchTom Pondeljak, Melbourne Victory
RefereeMatthew Breeze
Attendance53,273
2008
2010

It was the final match in the A-League 2008–09 season, and was played between premiers Melbourne Victory and runners-up Adelaide United. Melbourne Victory won the match 1–0 and became the winners of the 2008–09 Championship, thus becoming the first team to win the A-League domestic treble, after also claiming the 2008 Pre-Season Challenge Cup, and the 2008–09 Premiership.[1]

The Grand Final was the last event to be held at the Telstra Dome, the former name of Melbourne's Docklands Stadium. Due to a change in sponsorship, the stadium is now known as Etihad Stadium.

Route to the finals edit

Match edit

Summary edit

With both teams down to ten men for the last 25 minutes, Adelaide were left scoreless with Melbourne taking their second A-League championship medal. Pondeljak's goal earned him the prestigious Joe Marston Medal.

A contentious early red card given to the lone Adelaide striker Cristiano by referee Matthew Breeze saw the Reds go down to ten men by the tenth minute.[2][3] However, Adelaide managed to hold back Melbourne from scoring until Tom Pondeljak scored 23 metres out from goal in the 60th minute to allow Melbourne to take the lead.

Five minutes later, Melbourne striker Daniel Allsopp was also sent off for allegedly headbutting Adelaide's Robert Cornthwaite in an incident in the Melbourne penalty box.[1]

Both Cristiano and Allsopp's red cards were revoked by the Football Federation Australia in a post-match conference.[4]

Details edit

Melbourne Victory1–0Adelaide United
Pondeljak   60' Reports[5]
Attendance: 53,273
 
 
 
 
 
 
Melbourne Victory
 
 
 
 
 
 
Adelaide United
GK 1   Michael Theoklitos
RB 5   Sebastian Ryall
CB 2   Kevin Muscat (c)
CB 12   Rodrigo Vargas
LB 7   Matthew Kemp
DM 14   Billy Celeski
RM 15   Tom Pondeljak   61'     83'
LM 22   Nick Ward   56'
AM 16   Carlos Hernández
CF 9   Daniel Allsopp   65'
CF 10   Archie Thompson
Substitutes:
GK 20   Mitchell Langerak
MF 8   Grant Brebner   83'
FW 11   Ney Fabiano
MF 17   José Luis López   89'
MF 19   Evan Berger   56'     89'
Manager:
  Ernie Merrick
 
GK 20   Eugene Galeković
RB 16   Daniel Mullen
CB 19   Saša Ognenovski   37'
CB 2   Robert Cornthwaite     81'
LB 14   Scott Jamieson   56'     73'
DM 15   Jonas Salley
DM 24   Paul Reid
RW 13   Travis Dodd (c)   90'
AM 18   Fabian Barbiero   64'
LW 7   Lucas Pantelis   63'
CF 10   Cristiano   10'
Substitutes:
GK 30   Mark Birighitti
FW 3   Alemão
DF 6   Cássio   73'
FW 9   Paul Agostino   63'
MF 28   Rostyn Griffiths
Manager:
  Aurelio Vidmar

Joe Marston Medal:
Tom Pondeljak (Melbourne Victory)


Assistant referees:
Matthew Cream
Fourth official:
Peter Green

Match rules

A-League
2009 Champions
 
Melbourne Victory
Second Title

Statistics edit

Melbourne Adelaide
Attempts at goal 15 9
Attempts on target 6 3
Attempts off target 9 6
Attempts – Woodwork 0 0
Keeper saves 2 4
Ball possession 50% 50%
Corners 8 2
Fouls committed 17 19
Offsides 2 1
Yellow cards 1 5
Red cards 1 1

Controversy edit

The red card to Adelaide talisman Cristiano after just 10 minutes in the championship decider against Melbourne Victory created a lot of controversy post match.[6] The Brazilian starlet had been warned before that referee Matthew Breeze would send him off if he suspected anything untoward about his heading with flailing arms. He felt as though he was a marked man all season by referee Matthew Breeze[7] " I couldn't sleep after the game."[7]

Fox Sports analyst and Former Australia international Robbie Slater claimed the referee made the wrong call, "ruined" the Grand Final and argued that the A-League should hire an elite overseas official to handle its championship game.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b O'Brien, Bren (28 February 2009). "Victory prevail in epic". A-League.com.au. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  2. ^ O'Brien, Bren (28 February 2009). "Vidmar: Red card killed us". A-League.com.au. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 1 March 2009.
  3. ^ Taylor, John (2 March 2009). "A-League grand final red card sparks referee import call". Fox Sports (Australia). Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  4. ^ "Reds striker Cristiano's red card from A-League grand final has been revoked". Fox Sports (Australia). 3 March 2009. Retrieved 3 March 2009.
  5. ^ "2009 A-League Grand Final". 3 March 2011. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ "Motorsport Video |Motorsport Highlights, Replays, News, Clips".
  7. ^ a b c Taylor, John (2 March 2009). "A-League grand final red card sparks referee import call". Fox Sports. Retrieved 23 April 2013.

External links edit